The Source of
Dr Wallach's Minerals

Excerpt from the Book Dead Doctors Don't Lie

In December of 1994, Rockland refused to ship any more tankers of Toddy colloidal minerals to Soaring Eagle because Peter (Peter Holliday was the managing and controlling stockholder) had run a bill of $75,000. "Pay up or there would be no more minerals." Instead of doing the righteous thing and setting up a payment schedule, Peter went to a competitor and nemesis of Rockland called T.J. Clark.

By comparison to the Rockland operation, the Clark mining operation was very primitive. The Clark family had a bitter dispute when the father died and the three brothers split off into competing companies. The Clark minerals were not pure plant-derived colloidal minerals. They were, according to Bob Musac, the Clark marketing man, "a secret blend", that only T.J. Clark knew. According to Dr. Gerhard Schrauzer, an analysis of the blend showed that the mineral content of the T.J. Clark product varied significantly in consistency from batch to batch. (end of excerpt)

Note: The source of American Longevity's minerals are from the humic shale of the Rockland Corporation. These minerals are water leached NOT acid leached. Stay away from acid-leached minerals! Also, many companies in the colloidal mineral market use sea bed clay as their source. These are NOT considered plant source, though the bottle may even say so!


Question - So water is added to ground up shale to make Majestic Earth? Is there anything else added? Please describe the process from mining to the jug.

Dr. Wallach: First, we don't use the word "Mine". Rather, we harvest these dried plants, grind them up into a very fine flour, and leach out the minerals. Of course, the plants took the minerals from the soil millions of years ago. So it's very unique. ALL other liquid minerals on the market today are a fine clay or ground up rocks. The very big difference is they're inorganic.

They may say "colloidal", but you can use the term "colloidal" even with paint. Paint is a colloidal suspension of pigments in oil. The oil is a thick enough medium that the paint pigment stays in suspension for a long time. After a while it settles. And then you have to shake it to get it all back into suspension.


EDITORS NOTE:
As with any change in your diet or nutrition, see your health practitioner about utilizing this information. This information in no way attempts to construe a diagnosis, cure or treatment. **These statements have not been evaluated by the FDA. For any claims linking health to nutrition that is not "classic".

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